That Guy Who Price-Gouged AIDS Patients Did It to Kids with Kidney Disease

Started by jimmy olsen, September 24, 2015, 12:28:23 AM

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jimmy olsen

Despicable  :mad:

http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/09/22/martin_shkreli_price_gouging_the_hedge_fund_bro_pulled_drug_price_hike_scheme.html

QuoteThat Guy Who Is Price-Gouging AIDS Patients Also Did It to Kids with Kidney Disease

By Jeremy Stahl

The former hedge fund manager whose pharmaceutical company has come under withering attack for allegations of egregious price-gouging on life-saving medication is the subject of a $65 million lawsuit by his former employer for alleged stock manipulation—and it turns out he once tried a similar price hike scheme with that company. During Martin Shkreli's tenure as CEO of Retrophin—the company that is now suing him—the company increased prices on a decades-old kidney medication by about 20 times its original cost, a move similar to the controversial price increase by his new company reported by the New York Times on Sunday.

Martin Shkreli's current company, Turing Pharmaceuticals, has been criticized by Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders for spiking the price of a 62-year-old drug called Daraprim now used to treat AIDS patients. The price of one pill, which once cost $1, went up from $13.50 per tablet to $750 after Turing purchased it.

When Shkreli was CEO of Retrophin, the company purchased a kidney medication approved by the FDA in 1988 called Thiola and increased the cost from $1.50 per pill to $30 per pill.* That drug treated cystinuria, a lifelong disease for which there is no known cure and which afflicts about 20,000 patients in the United States. Forbes health care contributor Steve Brozak described the disease last year when news of the price increase broke:

Patients are usually diagnosed with the disease at a very young age and have an abnormally high concentration of an amino acid called cystine present in their urine. The excess cystine crystallizes regularly into stones that painfully travel through the kidneys, ureters or bladder. Imagine having a kidney stone form or pass once a month, tearing through your organs as it tracks its way out of your body.

There was no alternative drug for cystinuria sufferers, Brozak reported, and the 20-fold hike raised the price to about between $54,750 to $109,500 per year. At the time, Brozak argued that Retrophin was "turning patients into commodities like barrels of oil," while University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Associate Professor of Urology Benjamin Davies called it a case of "predatory capitalism on the backs of the sick and silent." Writing for Science Translational Medicine, pharmaceutical columnist Derek Lowe said the Thiola increase was the "most unconscionable drug price hike I have yet seen."

Shkreli is currently going on business news programs arguing for the current price hike on Daraprim by saying that it is necessary for future research and development. Last year, Retrophin made the exact same argument in a since-removed business presentation on its website to justify its price increase on Thiola, saying that it "plans to develop a long-acting version of Thiola® for once daily dosing." (In a hilarious and perhaps not atypical legal notice about the "anticipated development, timing, data readouts and therapeutic scope of programs in our clinical pipeline," the proposal warned "[t]hese forward-looking statements may be accompanied by such words as 'anticipate,' 'believe,' 'estimate,' 'expect,' 'forecast,' 'intend,' 'may,' 'plan,' 'project,' 'target,' 'will' and other words and terms of similar meaning. You should not place undue reliance on these statements.")

Retrophin, meanwhile, announced last month that it was suing Shkreli for more than $65 million in damages, alleging that he misused company funds to settle legal disputes against him and hedge funds he ran. Bloomberg Business reported at the time that Shkreli was "the target of investor lawsuits over his trading in Retrophin stock, and the company has said it received a subpoena tied to a probe by federal prosecutors in Brooklyn, New York." The company claimed that the government had asked for information about Shkreli. It also alleged that through "sham consulting agreements" and stock manipulation schemes, he had fraudulently obtained more than $5.6 million in cash and $59 million in Retrophin stock from the company.

Shkreli told Bloomberg that the lawsuit was "baseless and meritless" and called the suit "preposterous" in an interview with Forbes. He also went on Twitter at the time of the lawsuit seeming to threaten a $150 million countersuit, saying "yeah whatever," and citing Wu-Tang Clan.

i am not the one to fuck with #wutang

— Martin Shkreli (@MartinShkreli) August 17, 2015
It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point

Ideologue

Kinemalogue
Current reviews: The 'Burbs (9/10); Gremlins 2: The New Batch (9/10); John Wick: Chapter 2 (9/10); A Cure For Wellness (4/10)

Martinus

Well, he has just been doxxed by hackers, but I hope this is just the beginning. I hope he will be hounded till he commits suicide.

Hamilcar

Quote from: Martinus on September 24, 2015, 01:14:18 AM
Well, he has just been doxxed by hackers, but I hope this is just the beginning. I hope he will be hounded till he commits suicide.

That's just a patch on a very broken system. Healthcare in the US (even with Obamacare) is completely borked.

Martinus

Systemic reforms are needed but some tarring and feathering could be brought back again. In the past the societies were more lawless but social ostracism played a larger role too. In this global age the regulations and laws are not there but social ostracism has also grown much less powerful - we need Anonymous or Arrow to bridge that gap.

Eddie Teach

There should be legal ramifications for such villainy.

Cyber lynch mobs aren't a solution for anything.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

Martinus

Quote from: Peter Wiggin on September 24, 2015, 02:52:14 AM
There should be legal ramifications for such villainy.

Cyber lynch mobs aren't a solution for anything.

I think he should be made an example of, so that everyone else is dead afraid of ever pulling something like this off in future. I am not sure this can be done within the framework of our legal system, so I am willing to accept an out-of-the-box solution this time.

garbon

Ugh. I really hate how this is going to put a squeeze on the pharma industry in general (as the story has always been that prices are too high and this is now a perfect example for hysterics) and the bastard didn't even have the guts to stay with his ridiculous move.
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."

I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

Martinus

Quote from: garbon on September 24, 2015, 03:24:02 AM
Ugh. I really hate how this is going to put a squeeze on the pharma industry in general (as the story has always been that prices are too high and this is now a perfect example for hysterics) and the bastard didn't even have the guts to stay with his ridiculous move.

Poor pharma industry.  :rolleyes:

Tamas

Quote from: Martinus on September 24, 2015, 03:25:22 AM
Quote from: garbon on September 24, 2015, 03:24:02 AM
Ugh. I really hate how this is going to put a squeeze on the pharma industry in general (as the story has always been that prices are too high and this is now a perfect example for hysterics) and the bastard didn't even have the guts to stay with his ridiculous move.

Poor pharma industry.  :rolleyes:

I know nothing of the details of its workings but I am pretty sure it requires a lot of effort, learning, brains, and equipment to do pharma research. There have to be dividents, otherwise those people would leave their beneficial roles and careers and switch to something that just leeches on society. Might even sunk as low as becoming lawyers.

garbon

Quote from: Tamas on September 24, 2015, 03:52:37 AM
Quote from: Martinus on September 24, 2015, 03:25:22 AM
Quote from: garbon on September 24, 2015, 03:24:02 AM
Ugh. I really hate how this is going to put a squeeze on the pharma industry in general (as the story has always been that prices are too high and this is now a perfect example for hysterics) and the bastard didn't even have the guts to stay with his ridiculous move.

Poor pharma industry.  :rolleyes:

I know nothing of the details of its workings but I am pretty sure it requires a lot of effort, learning, brains, and equipment to do pharma research. There have to be dividents, otherwise those people would leave their beneficial roles and careers and switch to something that just leeches on society. Might even sunk as low as becoming lawyers.

:hug:

And Mart, why would I want pharma squeezed? One of the first things they slash to barebones is MR budget and that is not good for me!
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."

I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

Martinus

Quote from: Tamas on September 24, 2015, 03:52:37 AM
Quote from: Martinus on September 24, 2015, 03:25:22 AM
Quote from: garbon on September 24, 2015, 03:24:02 AM
Ugh. I really hate how this is going to put a squeeze on the pharma industry in general (as the story has always been that prices are too high and this is now a perfect example for hysterics) and the bastard didn't even have the guts to stay with his ridiculous move.

Poor pharma industry.  :rolleyes:

I know nothing of the details of its workings but I am pretty sure it requires a lot of effort, learning, brains, and equipment to do pharma research. There have to be dividents, otherwise those people would leave their beneficial roles and careers and switch to something that just leeches on society. Might even sunk as low as becoming lawyers.
:rolleyes:

Actually, lawyers' fees are a significant part of big pharma costs.  :P

The Larch

The problem here, rather than one of the pharma industry per se, seems to be of business practices at the management level and lack of regulation. For what I read, this drug's patent has ended, and in other countries it is available at very low prices (less than 1 dollar per pill in the UK, for instance, with some Indian generics being as low as a few cents per pill). How in the US a company can rampantly hike the price with no consequences after acquiring the rights to produce it is a matter for regulators.

Monoriu

Then what stops the patients from buying the drugs from elsewhere? :unsure:

The Larch

Quote from: Monoriu on September 24, 2015, 05:18:41 AM
Then what stops the patients from buying the drugs from elsewhere? :unsure:

The drug market is extremely regulated in some aspects, and buying foreign drugs is normally impossible through legal means. Even in the EU this is something very controlled.